Curated articles, resources, tips and trends from the DevOps World.
It’s too hard for developers to do the right thing, according to Feross Aboukhadijeh, an avid open source maintainer and founder of Socket, a startup focused on the security of open source components.
In a world riven by macroeconomic uncertainty, businesses increasingly turn to data-driven decision-making to stay agile. That’s especially true of the DevOps teams tasked with driving digital-fueled sustainable growth.
Sixty-five million dollars: That’s how much one customer was billed by DataDog in the first quarter of 2022, according to a May 4 earnings call for the SaaS observability and security vendor.
Kafka is popular, there’s no question. Due to its high performance optimized for throughput, it can also scale to large amounts. As Kafka scales, cost is a concern, so the price/performance value is key to most organizations running Kafka.
A few years back, most technology articles would have you thinking that Linux containers and virtual machines were diametrically opposed components in the data center.
There are a lot of things to love about WebAssembly — but how do developers decide when to use it? Does it matter in what language you write to WebAssembly? And what about security? To learn more about what frontend developers need to know, I sat down with Andrew Cornwall, a senior analyst with Fo
The overwhelming majority of developers in a new survey — 84% — say they’re involved in DevOps activities. But despite this, devs haven’t gotten any faster at making code changes and putting them into production over the past two and a half years.
VANCOUVER, British Columbia — At the Linux Foundation Open Source Summit North America, Amazon Web Services (AWS) made not one, but two, important open source security announcements. First, the company is open sourcing its Cedar policy language and authorization engine.
Lacework, a cloud security services company, offers a data-driven platform for application security at scale in the cloud.
At many companies, incident is a four-letter word. An incident is an emergency; everyone must drop everything and extinguish the fire. As a result, engineers are only willing to declare an incident once they absolutely have to. Nobody wants to cause a stir.
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